Saturday 31 December 2011

Domestic policy chief starts, leaves amid crises (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Melody Barnes is leaving as White House chief domestic policy adviser at a time when President Barack Obama's administration is getting little notice for its work on the home front to fix the struggling economy.

Barnes, who will be gone by Tuesday, is quick to point out that there have been many domestic achievements, even though the public is dissatisfied.

"I completely understand what the American public is feeling," she said in an interview in her tidy West Wing office. "Real people are hurting in a significant way. ... At the same time, I'm proud of the things we've been able to accomplish over the last few years."

Her office is wrestling with multiple thorny issues now just as it was when Barnes started as Obama's domestic policy team director in 2009.

Back then, the economy plunged into free-fall and the country was in its worst economic crisis since the 1930s. Jobs were being lost at a rate of about 750,000 a month ? a number Barnes still finds so staggering she said she has to double-check it every time she says it.

Homes were being foreclosed, unemployment was skyrocketing and reaching double the national average in the black community. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan dragged on, an outbreak of H1N1flu virus became a pandemic, and a tsunami that hit Japan crippled a nuclear plant near Tokyo, to name some of the highlights.

Even her chance to play golf with the president, the first time a woman joined him, came at a time of a public image crisis for Obama. The president was getting flak for playing basketball with men, fostering complaints about a boys' club in the White House.

Just before Christmas, the president and Congress wrangled over a two-month extension of a Social Security payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits. Obama won a victory when the proposal won bipartisan support in the Senate and finally was accepted by House Republicans under extreme pressure.

Barnes, a Richmond, Va., native with a career in government and private sector work, is bowing out of the political arena as Obama struggles with low approval ratings on his handling of the economy.

A majority of Americans do not think the president deserves a second term, according to the most recent Associated Press-GfK poll. But at the same time, the unemployment rate has dropped to 8.6 percent, the lowest level since March 2009. The president's overall approval rating stands at 44 percent, the lowest of his term in AP-GfK surveys.

His strong stance against House Republicans in the payroll tax standoff has caused an uptick in approval ratings in subsequent polls.

Barnes expects the list of legislative victories that she and others pulled off amid the hemorrhaging economy will become more clear in the coming year as the dark clouds of the economy disperse.

She tops that list with the early work to stabilize the economy, 21 months of consistent job growth and the president's long-term investments in education overhaul, an area that became her specialty.

"Our work on education reform, it'll be part of this president's legacy," she said.

Barnes said that with a fraction of what the federal government spends annually on education, about $100 billion, from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the administration tapped into an education reform movement taking place at the grass roots among governors and local communities frustrated with the prescriptive, one-size-fits-all mandates of No Child Left Behind, the Bush administration's education cornerstone.

Congress has yet to approve revisions to No Child Left Behind, states are using up the stimulus money, and Obama's Race to the Top grant program faces spending cuts. But Barnes said Obama has given a boost to education law changes that now allow such things as connecting student performance and teacher evaluations.

Barnes, chief counsel to the late Sen. Edward Kennedy on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Obama also deserves credit for passage of a health care overhaul, legislation that she had worked on for eight years with Kennedy. The Massachusetts senator spent his career trying to restructure health care.

There's also the auto industry bailout, expansion of Pell grants to help fund college education, the end of the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays and work to advance civil rights, she said.

"When you are worried about day to day, it's hard to step back and to take all those other things in," Barnes said. "Although at the same time, I'm literally in the grocery store and people come up to me and say, `Hey, you work for the president. You keep on doing what you are doing.' "

Married a few months into the president's first year, Barnes plans to spend more time with family. She is considering offers in the private sector but hasn't disclosed what those are.

___

Online:

White House Domestic Policy Council: http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/dpc

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111231/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_white_house_adviser

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Friday 30 December 2011

Jay-Z Sued Over Insurance Dispute For Maids, Servants | AllHipHop ...

(AllHipHop News) Rap star/mogul Jay-Z has been hit with a lawsuit by the Workers Compensation Board of New York.

TMZ.com reports that the Workers Compensation Board of New York has filed a lawsuit against Jay-Z, over an $18,000 fine over a dispute regarding workers compensation insurance.

The rapper was sued for the $18,000 for not having the proper insurance for his domestic help for three months in 2009.

The insurance was meant to cover domestic workers in Jay-Z?s house, including his cooks, maids and drivers.

A court ruled in favor of the Workers Compensation Board of New York and ordered Jay to fork over the cash, for not having the proper insurance.

But reps for Jay-Z claimed that he quickly acquired the proper insurance for his domestic servants and disputed the $18,000 fine.

According to TMZ, the $18,000 bill was the result of a ?clerical error.?

In related news, Jay-Z?s 40/40 Club will reopen in New York City on January 18.

The club closed in June, to undergo $10 million dollars worth of renovations that includes a new bar, VIP section and menu.

During the reconstruction, Jay-Z was l criticized for his choice of labor to work on the 40/40 Club.

In September, the Carpenters Union in New York protested Jay-Z for hiring nonunion labor by erecting five large inflatable rats, in front of the 40/40 Club.

Reps for Jay-Z said they had no obligations to hire union workers and claimed members of the union used the ?N? word during the protest.

Source: http://allhiphop.com/2011/12/29/jay-z-sued-over-insurance-dispute-for-maids-servants/

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Girls Hockey Coach Resigns

Posted at: 12/28/2011 3:16 PM | Updated at: 12/28/2011 4:18 PM

Ron Hendrickson submitted his letter of resignation before Christmas, according to school superintendent Deb Hilde.

He had been on paid administrative leave, pending an investigation by the district. The district confirmed earlier in December that there had been some concerns brought to them.

Because Hendrickson resigned before the investigation findings were reviewed, the district said that no other information is public.

An investigation was finished, she did confirm.

Hilde said that two head coaches are now in place, Mike Lenich and Dave Kunz, and one of the volunteer coaches has been moved up into a paid position.

Hendrickson declined to comment on Wednesday, when reached at his home.

Source: http://www.wdio.com/article/stories/s2430979.shtml?cat=10335

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Thursday 29 December 2011

At last, school finance lawsuit number 4 (Offthekuff)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179594788?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Supervisors adopt county energy policy

Glenn County supervisors adopted an energy usage and sustainability policy for county departments last week that will curb their natural gas and electricity consumption.

Planning and Public Works Director John Linhart said the policy is the direct result of working groups studying the issue to find "common sense'' solutions.

Linhart said each department will be encouraged to follow the new measures, and it will be up to the department heads to enforce the policy.

"We don't want to force them on departments," he added.

The policy will be in effect for a year and then be reviewed by the board, Linhart said.

Some departments have already started using their own energy efficiency policies, he said.

A few of the mandates include setting thermostats no lower than 75 degrees for airconditioners and no higher than 68 degrees for heating.

Closing all exterior doors and windows to avoid energy loss, except when the climate allows, and to open or close window coverings to utilize or block the sun's rays.

Other options include only having lights on when necessary, shutting personal computers and monitors off at night, printing double-sided for all nonofficial documents and so on.

Supervisor Leigh McDaniel said the county is getting away from simply recycling to adding energy efficiency to its internal operations.

However, he wants to bring a broader policy back for the county as a region, McDaniel said.

The fact Glenn County is working with KVB, Inc. on its proposed waste conversion facility near Hamilton City and the board just approved a solar power generation facility near Thunderhill Raceway indicates it is heading in the right direction, he said.

A Green Policy Committee consisting of one Glenn County supervisor and representatives of all departments is to meet quarterly for the term the policy is in effect, county officials said.

Contact Rick Longley at 934-6800 or rlongley@tcnpress.com.

Source: http://www.orland-press-register.com/news/county-8496-policy-energy.html

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Wednesday 28 December 2011

Busy Year For Military Honor Guard

AP) _ A Thruway travel plaza in central New York remains closed after a grease fire in a kitchen caused heavy smoke damage to the building.

State police tell The Citizen of Auburn? that the fire started Christmas night at the Port Byron Service Plaza along the eastbound lanes of Interstate 90 in the town of Montezuma, between Exits 41 and 40.

No injuries were reported.

The Thruway Authority says the plaza remains closed Monday morning, with no food or restrooms available. The gas station at the plaza is open and fuel is available.

The next available food and restrooms on the Thruway's eastbound side are at the Dewitt travel plaza just east of Exit 36 at Syracuse.

Source: http://www.wham1180.com/cc-common/news/sections/newsarticle.html?feed=122742&article=9543570

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Thursday 22 December 2011

Even limited telemedicine could improve developing health

Even limited telemedicine could improve developing health [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Albert Ang
ejournal@inderscience.com
Inderscience Publishers

A lack of infrastructure in developing countries, and particularly in rural areas, often ensures that healthcare provision is absent. Research published in the International Journal of Services, Economics and Management by a team at Howard University in Washington DC suggests a solution to this insidious problem involving the development of telemedicine.

Ronald Leach and colleagues describe a highly asynchronous service model for healthcare delivery. The approach is much cheaper to implement than direct medicine and even less expensive than other approaches to telemedicine that have been suggested for rural and developing parts of the world. The approach to rolling out their solution is entirely incremental and would provide improved health service even in the initial stages before the system is fully implemented, the team says. "Our proposed service model provides relatively comprehensive, but not universal, healthcare coverage," says Leach. "The application of current thinking in systems service engineering, when coupled with economic models of costs (in both monetary and resource areas), can help provide an extremely useful healthcare environment," he adds.

Telemedicine usually refers to the synchronous electronic communication of medical information - medical records, videos of complex procedures, training information, viewing of remote procedures and analysis etc . The promise is that telemedicine could bring medical expertise to remote areas without the expense and difficulties of trying to bring the experts to the patients or requiring many of those patients from such regions to central hospitals or clinics. There is also hope that telemedicine might allow epidemics to be more quickly contained as information is shared and emerging problems addressed more rapidly. This form of telemedicine is, however, expensive in itself and not amenable to the poor infrastructure of many rural developing communities.

Fundamentally, rural developing communities mostly do not have the information technology bandwidth to support synchronous telemedicine. However, there is often adequate technology for some communication and Leach and colleagues suggest that this might be exploited in asynchronous telemedicine.

Until now, there have been no viable models for overcoming the limitations inherent in existing communications infrastructure in Africa, and elsewhere. Leach suggests that a relatively low- cost solution makes use of existing communications channels, computing equipment, text messaging via cell phone, medical personnel and technical support service personnel and says that parts of the system are relatively easy-to-implement, at least from a technical perspective. The approach also exploits the daylight time difference between Africa and the US to utilise bandwidth on communications satellites at a time when US users are least active. There is in asynchronous telemedicine no need to network the computers just to provide each with access to the information via available satellite channels.

A nine-step example shows how asynchronous telemedicine might benefit a patient who is seen by a local healthcare worker or can reach a rural clinic.

1 The healthcare practitioner makes a preliminary analysis of the patient's condition and enters identifying information into a laptop or cell phone.

2 The healthcare practitioner connects a cell phone or laptop over underused satellite networks to the electronic healthcare records, EHRs, database stored somewhere in the cloud of servers in the USA.

3 The healthcare practitioner queries the EHRs database for information on this patient or on local outbreaks of relevant diseases.

4 A minimal, text-based set of information is sent to the healthcare practitioner's laptop or cell phone over the underused satellite network.

5 Based on the information received, the healthcare practitioner treats the patient. Medical supplies may be ordered if available.

6 If the medical situation can wait, the local healthcare provider asks for additional medical opinions from colleagues in his or her own county or in the USA.

7 After the patient is treated, the results of the treatment are uploaded by the healthcare practitioner to the patient's record stored in the cloud.

8 The process described in steps 1 to 7 are repeated if necessary.

9 Local public health officials are notified if appropriate.

###

"A service model for improving healthcare delivery in rural developing communities" in Int. J. Services, Economics and Management, 2012, 4, 75-92



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Even limited telemedicine could improve developing health [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Albert Ang
ejournal@inderscience.com
Inderscience Publishers

A lack of infrastructure in developing countries, and particularly in rural areas, often ensures that healthcare provision is absent. Research published in the International Journal of Services, Economics and Management by a team at Howard University in Washington DC suggests a solution to this insidious problem involving the development of telemedicine.

Ronald Leach and colleagues describe a highly asynchronous service model for healthcare delivery. The approach is much cheaper to implement than direct medicine and even less expensive than other approaches to telemedicine that have been suggested for rural and developing parts of the world. The approach to rolling out their solution is entirely incremental and would provide improved health service even in the initial stages before the system is fully implemented, the team says. "Our proposed service model provides relatively comprehensive, but not universal, healthcare coverage," says Leach. "The application of current thinking in systems service engineering, when coupled with economic models of costs (in both monetary and resource areas), can help provide an extremely useful healthcare environment," he adds.

Telemedicine usually refers to the synchronous electronic communication of medical information - medical records, videos of complex procedures, training information, viewing of remote procedures and analysis etc . The promise is that telemedicine could bring medical expertise to remote areas without the expense and difficulties of trying to bring the experts to the patients or requiring many of those patients from such regions to central hospitals or clinics. There is also hope that telemedicine might allow epidemics to be more quickly contained as information is shared and emerging problems addressed more rapidly. This form of telemedicine is, however, expensive in itself and not amenable to the poor infrastructure of many rural developing communities.

Fundamentally, rural developing communities mostly do not have the information technology bandwidth to support synchronous telemedicine. However, there is often adequate technology for some communication and Leach and colleagues suggest that this might be exploited in asynchronous telemedicine.

Until now, there have been no viable models for overcoming the limitations inherent in existing communications infrastructure in Africa, and elsewhere. Leach suggests that a relatively low- cost solution makes use of existing communications channels, computing equipment, text messaging via cell phone, medical personnel and technical support service personnel and says that parts of the system are relatively easy-to-implement, at least from a technical perspective. The approach also exploits the daylight time difference between Africa and the US to utilise bandwidth on communications satellites at a time when US users are least active. There is in asynchronous telemedicine no need to network the computers just to provide each with access to the information via available satellite channels.

A nine-step example shows how asynchronous telemedicine might benefit a patient who is seen by a local healthcare worker or can reach a rural clinic.

1 The healthcare practitioner makes a preliminary analysis of the patient's condition and enters identifying information into a laptop or cell phone.

2 The healthcare practitioner connects a cell phone or laptop over underused satellite networks to the electronic healthcare records, EHRs, database stored somewhere in the cloud of servers in the USA.

3 The healthcare practitioner queries the EHRs database for information on this patient or on local outbreaks of relevant diseases.

4 A minimal, text-based set of information is sent to the healthcare practitioner's laptop or cell phone over the underused satellite network.

5 Based on the information received, the healthcare practitioner treats the patient. Medical supplies may be ordered if available.

6 If the medical situation can wait, the local healthcare provider asks for additional medical opinions from colleagues in his or her own county or in the USA.

7 After the patient is treated, the results of the treatment are uploaded by the healthcare practitioner to the patient's record stored in the cloud.

8 The process described in steps 1 to 7 are repeated if necessary.

9 Local public health officials are notified if appropriate.

###

"A service model for improving healthcare delivery in rural developing communities" in Int. J. Services, Economics and Management, 2012, 4, 75-92



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/ip-elt122111.php

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Thursday 27 October 2011

Review: Tom Waits in peak form on `Bad as Me' (AP)

Tom Waits, "Bad as Me" (ANTI-)

Tom Waits' first album of new music in seven years is a satisfying treat spanning his various sounds and styles. The 61-year-old musician is in peak form, working his voice like another one of his instruments ? spitting and wailing on some tracks, charming with his haunting falsetto on another.

Waits brings in a host of celebrated musicians to help him tell stories about heartache, war, life and living on "Bad as Me." Bluesman Charlie Musselwhite contributes harmonica to several tracks; veteran keyboardist Augie Meyers plays piano, organ and accordion; David Hidalgo of Los Lobos plays guitar on a few songs, as does the legendary Keith Richards, while Flea and Les Claypool contribute bass lines. Waits' son, Casey Waits, plays drums on most of the album's 13 tracks (The deluxe version has three additional songs).

"Bad as Me" opens with "Chicago," a mood-setting, rollicking track that chugs along like a bluesy freight train powered by Richards' guitar and Waits' growling vocals and banjo twang.

An animated Waits channels Elvis Presley and Wolfman Jack ? and mentions both ? in the rowdy "Get Lost," which rips like an old blues joint, touting the fun of having fun.

Claypool, Musselwhite and Richards play together on "Satisfied," where Waits howls about the satisfaction he will have "before I'm gone." Richards, Musselwhite and Flea join on the hard-rocking anti-war rant, "Hell Broke Luce," which layers real artillery sounds over snarling guitars.

Waits also shows his gentle side with poetic ballads such as "Kiss Me," a heart-wrenching track that sounds like it was recovered from an old vinyl record. "Kiss me like a stranger once again," he sings, his gravelly voice pained. He's Elvis-like again on the Latin-flavored "Back in the Crowd."

With its range of moods and sounds, "Bad as Me" is a timeless collection that reflects an artist in full possession of his gifts.

CHECK OUT THIS TRACK: Get a taste of Waits' trademark wail and his penchant for foot-stomping blues on the title single.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_en_mu/us_music_review_tom_waits

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Wednesday 26 October 2011

Calif. officer shooting suspect dies in custody

A man suspected of shooting and wounding a northern California police officer died in the custody of Sacramento police, following a foot chase, authorities said Sunday night.

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Tyrone Smith, 32, was unresponsive in the back of a patrol car after being caught late Saturday night some seven hours after the shooting of the Twin Rivers police officer, Sacramento police said in a statement.

Paramedics were called who took Smith to a hospital, where he was declared dead, the statement said.

Police said the cause of death had not been determined, but a preliminary investigation showed no indication it was a result of police actions.

Smith ran from officers and jumped over fences after he was found, then refused to comply when they caught up with him and had to be forced to the ground and handcuffed, the statement said.

He again tried to flee and fell to the ground before he was put in the patrol car, police said.

The Twin Rivers officer, whose name has not been released, was in critical condition after being hit with several bullets, but is expected to have a full recovery after surgery Sunday.

"Doctors are very optimistic," Twin Rivers police spokesman William Cho told the Sacramento Bee.

The shooting occurred when the officer tried to pull over the suspect's vehicle Saturday afternoon, the Sacramento police statement said.

The suspect refused to stop, then after a short car chase got out of his vehicle and fled on foot. As the officer chased him, the suspect fired and hit the officer several times, the statement said.

Detectives believe the suspect got back in his vehicle and fled.

Paramedics who happened to be in the area quickly reached the officer and took him to the hospital, the statement said.

Police did not say why the officer tried to pull over the suspect when the incident began.

Several units of the Sacramento Police Department along with the city's Office of Public Safety and Accountability and the Sacramento County District Attorney's Office are investigating the two shootings.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45004594/ns/us_news/

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Tuesday 25 October 2011

92% Point Blank

"A desperate man is a dangerous thing."Samuel Pierret (Gilles Lellouche) is a nurse who saves the wrong guy -- a thief (Roschdy Zem) whose henchmen take Samuel's pregnant wife (Elena Anaya) hostage to force him to spring their boss from the hospital. A race through the subways and streets of Paris ensues, and the body count rises. Can Samuel evade the cops and the criminal underground and deliver his beloved to safety?REVIEWSamuel, a nurse-in-training at a Parisian hospital is suddenly in the middle of a conspiracy, and he has no way out until he can get his wife back. Simple enough? Not quite, but here is a movie that is like "The Fugitive" on steroids, powered by dynamic direction, and a very charismatic couple of lead actors. Samuel, find himself, avoiding bullets, thugs, cops, killers, cars, trains, security cameras, and that's just the background. He is also dealing with a very personal crisis, and there are a couple of sensational scenes that take place in the middle of a very busy train station, and if you have ever been in one of those European transportation hubs, you can almost feel his pain, as he is trying to avoid being captured and killed. The second scene involves a hectic police station, and some very creative plot twists.Here is a film many should see in its original version (I'm already thinking it will probably go through a least creative American reworking), but it is perfectly enjoyable the way it is; actually it's quite a thrill to see that in addition to films like "Tell No One", French filmmakers are producing some very interesting films, with non-stop action. You will feel your heart beating almost out of your chest.

August 29, 2011

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/point_blank/

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Abu Dhabi firm backtracks on Guggenheim contract

FILE - In this Sunday, May 17, 2009 file photo laborers work on a newly constructed housing village for construction workers that is expected to open in July 2009 on Saadiyat Island the location of the new Guggenheim Museum in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The Abu Dhabi company building a branch of the Guggenheim museum in the Emirati capital said Sunday it has temporarily dropped plans to award a major construction contract, raising questions about the future of the high-profile project. (AP Photo/Andrew Parsons, File)

FILE - In this Sunday, May 17, 2009 file photo laborers work on a newly constructed housing village for construction workers that is expected to open in July 2009 on Saadiyat Island the location of the new Guggenheim Museum in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The Abu Dhabi company building a branch of the Guggenheim museum in the Emirati capital said Sunday it has temporarily dropped plans to award a major construction contract, raising questions about the future of the high-profile project. (AP Photo/Andrew Parsons, File)

FILE - In this taken Sunday, May 17, 2009 file photo a newly constructed housing village for construction workers is seen on Saadiyat Island the location of the new Guggenheim Museum in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The Abu Dhabi company building a branch of the Guggenheim museum in the Emirati capital said Sunday Oct 23 2011 it has temporarily dropped plans to award a major construction contract, raising questions about the future of the high-profile project. (AP Photo/Andrew Parsons, File)

FILE- In this filephoto dated Saturday July 8, 2006, American architect Frank Gehry, center, and Sheik Sultan bin Tahnoon Al Nahyan, who heads the Abu Dhabi tourism authority, left, speak to journalists as they announce plans to design a new branch of the Guggenheim's modern and contemporary art museum in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The Abu Dhabi company building a branch of the Guggenheim museum in the Emirati capital said Sunday it has temporarily dropped plans to award a major construction contract, raising questions about the future of the high profile project. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili-FILE)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) ? The Abu Dhabi company building a branch of the Guggenheim museum in the Emirati capital said Sunday it has temporarily dropped plans to award a major construction contract, raising questions about the future of the high profile project.

The state-run Tourism Development and Investment Co. said it recalled the tender for concrete work on the Frank Gehry-designed museum because it is reviewing its strategy for handing out jobs to contractors. It didn't say when it would again seek bids.

The Guggenheim is one of the showcase museums TDIC is building on Abu Dhabi's Saadiyat Island, a planned cultural district overlooking the Persian Gulf. The island is also slated to contain a national museum, performing arts center and a branch of the Louvre.

A spokeswoman insisted Sunday that the Guggenheim project is still moving ahead, but didn't provide details.

TDIC has previously said it would open the museum by 2013.

Some preliminary groundwork for the 450,000-square-foot museum has been completed. The construction contract now on hold would have involved major work on the museum's base and other parts of the building.

TDIC has not released the value of that deal.

TDIC is one of several companies set up by Abu Dhabi to diversify the economy and drive development in the emirate, which borders Dubai to the south.

The money-losing company relies heavily on direct cash infusions from the oil-rich Abu Dhabi government, but it also has turned to banks to fund some of its operations.

TDIC executives traveled to Europe and Asia over the summer to meet with potential investors about the possibility of issuing new bonds, but then put off those fundraising plans.

The Guggenheim project has been a flashpoint for controversy.

In March, more than 130 international artists and writers promised to boycott the museum unless authorities do more to protect workers' rights at the site. That followed an earlier report by Human Rights Watch that outlined alleged abuses against migrant workers on the project.

TDIC has said it is committed to protecting workers' rights and has taken on board many of Human Rights Watch's recommendations.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-23-ML-Abu-Dhabi-Guggenheim/id-76d76a3cbf2e4f6085a2b482e60d7687

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Monday 24 October 2011

Obama to tout housing aid on western campaign swing (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama will tout newly unveiled measures on Monday aimed at aiding struggling homeowners and easing the housing crisis on the first leg of a campaign-style swing through western states crucial to his re-election in 2012.

Stymied by Republican resistance to his $447 billion jobs package and tapping into public displeasure with Congress, Obama is rolling out a series of economic remedies that do not require approval from a fractious Congress, a White House official said.

A leading U.S. housing regulator on Monday announced changes to a government refinancing program that could help up to one million homeowners classified as "underwater" because their mortgages cost more than their homes are worth.

The plan for homeowner relief will be the centerpiece of Obama's visit on Monday to Nevada, the state with the highest foreclosure rate in the country.

It is the latest White House effort to deal with a key factor stalling the economy -- a crippled housing market -- and adding to political liabilities for Obama, whose re-election bid is already imperiled by stubbornly high U.S. unemployment.

It remained unclear whether the Obama administration's revised approach, which falls short of an overarching plan that some experts have said is needed, will provide enough of a boost to the battered housing market to spur the stagnant U.S. economic recovery.

Earlier federal programs to curb housing foreclosures have failed to yield the benefits initially promised. An estimated 11 million U.S. homeowners hold properties that are worth less than their mortgages.

Seeking to show he is ready to take unilateral action to confront economic problems, Obama will also unveil a student loan initiative on a visit to Colorado. He will attend fundraising events in both states plus California during the three-day trip.

The states on Obama's tour were chosen deliberately.

Each has large populations of Hispanics, a voting bloc Obama's campaign is eager to win over. Nevada and Colorado are "swing states" that alternate allegiance between Republicans and Democrats, making them valuable political prizes in presidential elections. Both could prove critical to Obama's chances in the November 2012 election.

He will use them as a backdrop to make his latest push to boost the weak economy, which remains the biggest obstacle to his hopes of retaining the presidency. According to the White House official, he will also try out a new slogan to put pressure on Congress: "We can't wait."

'SAVE HIS OWN JOB'

Republicans, choosing among a field of presidential candidates currently led by former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and businessman Herman Cain, accused Obama of focusing more on fundraising than helping the unemployed.

"The president is back to doing what he does best -- raising money to save his own job," said Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, in a new advertisement. "Instead of focusing on getting the 14 million unemployed Americans back to work, he's focusing on protecting his own."

Housing is one area that has dogged Obama's efforts to improve the economy.

His administration has been working with the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), the regulator for mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to find ways to make it easier for borrowers to switch to cheaper loans even if they have little to no equity in their homes.

Obama will highlight the result of that work during his stop in Nevada, the epicenter of the foreclosure crisis.

Before Obama left Washington, the FHFA announced it was easing the terms of the two-year-old Home Affordable Refinance Program, which helps borrowers who have been making mortgage payments on time but have not been able to refinance as home values have dropped.

To help underwater borrowers, FHFA said it will scrap a cap that prohibits any homeowners whose mortgage exceeds 125 percent of the property's value from participating in HARP, which is targeted at loans backed by Fannie and Freddie.

Regulators are revamping the refinancing program to ensure banks are protected from having to buy back HARP loans. The requirements now state they will only have to verify that borrowers have made at least six of their last mortgage payments and in most cases, eliminate the need for appraisals.

FHFA said that Fannie and Freddie will waive certain fees for borrowers that refinance into loans with a shorter term, aiming for homeowners to pay down the amount they owe at a faster rate.

HARP, one of the Obama administration's anti-foreclosure efforts, was unveiled in March 2009 and expected to help as many as 5 million borrowers. So far, 893,800 borrowers have refinanced their loans through August by using HARP. FHFA said it will extend HARP until December 31, 2013.

With mortgage rates currently near record lows, allowing these underwater borrowers to refinance could help stave off a wave of foreclosures and free up cash for other spending that could help underpin the economy's recovery.

(Additional reporting by Caren Bohan, JoAnne Allen and Margaret Chadbourn; editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/ts_nm/us_usa_campaign_obama

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Sunday 23 October 2011

UN council elections head into extra rounds (AP)

UNITED NATIONS ? Pakistan, Morocco, Guatemala, and Togo were elected to two-year Security Council terms on Friday, but the balloting for the fifth seat went into extra rounds after U.N. members failed to give a majority to one of two remaining candidates for the East European seat.

Balloting went into a fifth round late Friday afternoon after the previous tally showed 98 votes for Slovenia and 93 for Azerbaijan. Hungary, which also had been a candidate for the sole East Europe slot, was earlier knocked out of the running due to a low vote count.

U.N. General Assembly members elected Pakistan, Morocco and Guatemala in the first round when it gave each the two-thirds majority it needed to join the United Nations' most powerful body. Togo was elected in the third round.

The new members will assume their posts on Jan. 1 and serve through the end of 2013.

Security Council seats are highly coveted because they give countries a strong voice in matters dealing with international peace and security.

"We are honored and privileged to join such an esteemed body and look forward to the positive contributions we will make to its work in maintaining and promoting international peace and security," said Togo President Faure Gnassingbe, who traveled to New York for the vote.

The new makeup puts Pakistan on the council alongside its regional rival India, which like Colombia, Germany, Portugal and South Africa is serving a two-year term that wraps up at the end of 2012. They'll also serve with the five permanent, veto-wielding members: China, France, Russia, Britain and the United States.

"We had a very tough fight," Pakistani Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon said. "Hopefully we will be working well with all of the other council members, especially India."

Because Guatemala has never recognized a Palestinian state, the new council may also be less inclined to support the Palestinians' request for U.N. membership in the unlikely chance the bid carries into the new year. Palestinian diplomats said this week they are trying to muster support for a Nov. 11 vote.

The only certain winner going into Friday's election was Guatemala, which ran unopposed for the sole seat for Latin America and the Caribbean. Two seats for Africa, one for Asia and one for Eastern Europe were all contested.

The five new members replace Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Gabon, Lebanon and Nigeria.

Because ballots are secret, multiple rounds of votes are common in Security Council elections. In 2007, a runoff between Guatemala and Venezuela went 47 rounds before Panama was finally offered, and accepted, as the Latin America candidate.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_re_us/un_un_security_council_elections

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How the poll was conducted (AP)

The Associated Press-GfK Poll on the Wall Street protests and political emotions was conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Corporate Communications from Oct. 13-17. It is based on landline and cellphone telephone interviews with a nationally representative random sample of 1,000 adults, including 384 respondents who said they were supporters of the Wall Street protests. Interviews were conducted with 700 respondents on landline telephones and 300 on cellular phones.

Digits in the phone numbers dialed were generated randomly to reach households with unlisted and listed landline and cellphone numbers.

Interviews were conducted in both English and Spanish.

As is done routinely in surveys, results were weighted, or adjusted, to ensure that responses accurately reflect the population's makeup by factors such as age, sex, education and race. In addition, the weighting took into account patterns of phone use ? landline only, cell only and both types ? by region.

No more than one time in 20 should chance variations in the sample cause the results to vary by more than plus or minus 4 percentage points from the answers that would be obtained if all adults in the U.S. were polled. The margin of sampling error for those supporting the Wall Street protests was plus or minus 6.5 percentage points.

There are other sources of potential error in polls, including the wording and order of questions.

The questions and results are available at http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_re_us/us_ap_poll_wall_street_protests_method

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Saturday 22 October 2011

No way Jackson self-injected fatal drug: expert (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? The claim by attorneys of Michael Jackson's doctor that the singer killed himself with an injection of the powerful anesthetic propofol is a "crazy scenario," a top anesthesiology expert testified Thursday.

Dr. Steven Shafer told jurors that the level of propofol found in Jackson's bloodstream at his 2009 autopsy was too high to be explained by the theory that he self-injected.

As the last prosecution witness at Dr. Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, Shafer also sought to undercut defense attorney theories that Jackson swallowed a fatal number of sedative lorazepam pills.

Murray admitted to police that, while at Jackson's mansion, he injected him with propofol and lorazepam as a sleep aid. But Murray's attorneys have argued Jackson could have given himself an extra, fatal dose of propofol while alone in his bedroom.

Shafer discounted that idea, saying the 50 year-old "Thriller" singer would have had to inject himself several times to achieve a cumulative rise of the propofol in his bloodstream.

"People just don't wake up from anesthesia like that," Shafer told jurors, after flailing his arms to mimic a patient regaining consciousness and then injecting himself.

"People don't wake up ... hellbent to give themselves another dose," Shafer said. "It's a crazy scenario."

Shafer used charts to explain that while propofol can stop a person from breathing, the heart continues beating for 10 minutes and circulates blood.

Even if Jackson injected himself with the large dose of 100 milligrams of propofol six times, and stopped breathing with the last shot, his heart would still beat long enough to lower the propofol concentration below the level found in the bloodstream at autopsy, Shafer said.

ONLY 25 MILLIGRAMS?

Murray told police that he gave Jackson only 25 milligrams of propofol and two, 2 milligram injections of lorazepam on June 25, 2009, the day the pop star died.

But prosecutors have argued he gave Jackson a higher amount of lorazepam and followed up his initial injection of propofol with a continuous intravenous drip of that drug.

Medical examiners found that propofol was the main cause of Jackson's death, and the sedative lorazepam played a contributing role.

Murray's defense attorneys, in addition to suggesting Jackson "self-administered" more propofol, have argued the singer could have swallowed more lorazepam than the 4 milligrams that Murray said he gave as a sleep aid.

But Shafer Thursday also criticized that theory. He said the amount of actual lorazepam found in Jackson's stomach -- as opposed to the harmless, metabolized form of the drug -- was minuscule.

"The results ... prove that Michael Jackson did not swallow lorazepam," Shafer said.

He later explained his modeling only ruled out Jackson popping lorazepam pills up to four hours before his death.

At the same time, Shafer said, the amount of lorazepam found in Jackson's blood was too high to be explained by two, 2 milligram injections of the drug. So Murray may have given the singer additional injections, Shafer said.

Shafer also said numerous studies show propofol is not fatal when swallowed, undercutting a former, controversial defense theory that Jackson guzzled the drug by himself.

The defense is expected to cross examine Shafer later on Thursday and begin presenting its case Friday. Murray, who has pleaded not guilty, faces a maximum sentence of four years in prison if convicted.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111020/en_nm/us_michaeljackson

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Friday 21 October 2011

Gaddafi's Final Run: The End of the Colonel's Long, Weird Ride (Time.com)

Muammar Gaddafi was once bigger than life. But at the end of his time in power, his braggadocio had become surreal, his threats disembodied; he was almost all feint and desperate manipulation. "It's time to leave frizz head" read one sign in Tripoli, the capital once both enthralled and scared to death of him, as his control over the city crumbled in August. Pay no attention to the man wearing the curtain.

Two months before his actual demise, his menace was already in retreat. In the late afternoon of Tuesday, Aug. 23, after hours of pounding battle, Libya's rebels smashed through the fortified perimeter of Gaddafi's compound in western Tripoli ? the nerve center of the old regime ? sending huge plumes of black smoke rising over the city. Gaddafi and his loyalists fled. He declared the withdrawal "tactical" but he was now running for his life. The triumphant transitional government, now no longer rebels but rulers, offered more than $1 million for his head. They got it on Oct. 20 when a bloodied Gaddafi was captured as his hometown of Sirt fell to the new government after a ferocious siege of several weeks. He was very quickly reported to have died of his wounds, a gruesome cellphone photo of a pale faced man looking much like the Colonel circulated online almost immediately. His last words may have been "Don't shoot." Gaddafi's long, weird run as unquestioned overlord of Libya was over. (See pictures of Gaddafi's 40 years in power.)

Long before his end, Muammar Gaddafi had become the weird, creepy, certainly criminal uncle who showed up, because he was really rich, at reunions of world leaders. He did not begin that way. How a young man from deep poverty in a rural North African town rose to become one of the West's most intractable foes, and then one of its most critical political and economic partners, is an extraordinary political saga.

Gaddafi was scarcely destined for power. Born in 1942 into a tribal Bedouin family near the coastal town of Sirt, he was raised in a country still digging out from the ravages of World War II and a long struggle against Italian colonialism. The giant oil reserves which lay beneath the Libyan desert were years away from being explored. In fact, Libya was barely a nation at all. Gaddafi was nine years old when the country finally gained its independence from France and Britain (which administered it jointly after the war's end) and became a monarchy under King Idris al-Sanusi. (Watch TIME's 2009 interview with Muammar Gaddafi.)

Like many provincial boys with little education, Gaddafi joined the army. He became a captain, then trained at Britain's elite Sandhurst Academy, before returning home as an officer in the Signal Corps. It was in that position, at just 27, that he led a group of junior officers in a bloodless coup, toppling King Idris and declaring himself Colonel. In the museum glorifying Gaddafi's "people's revolution," set within the high stone walls of the fortress in Tripoli's Green Square, one of the main exhibits was a battered, sand-colored Jeep with open sides, in which Gaddafi, according to his own legend, rode into the city, victorious on Sept. 1, 1969, to present himself as Libya's leader to a people hungry for popular leadership.

For many Libyans, it was a thrilling moment. Back in 1968, Gaddafi, a dashing young man with a chiseled jaw and piercing eyes, looked to many Libyans every bit as romantic a figure as Che Guevara. "We thought it was a revolution for freedom and human rights," says Fathi Baja, 58, a political science professor in Benghazi. Like countless young Libyans in 1969, Baja, who was at high school at the time, marched in the streets, hailing Gaddafi for overthrowing King Idris. Much later, Baja would become the opposition's head of political affairs when the rebellion against Gaddafi erupted in February 2011. By then, the vehicle of legend had become not Gaddafi's jeep but the ramshackle pick-ups that the rebel fighters rode to the front to battle his fearsome army. (See pictures of the fight for Gaddafi's hometown.)

See TIME's special report "The Middle East in Revolt."

See the world's most influential people in the 2011 TIME 100.

Libyans would grow to rue the day Gaddafi took over. He declared a "people's revolution" and officially changing the country's name to the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah ? the last word meaning "state of the masses" ? a bloated designation that was as meaningless at the end as Gaddafi's title of "Brother Leader."

Gaddafi's Libya was a parallel universe to the one the rest of humanity lived in. He laid out his plan for Libya in his 82-page Green Book, a quirky, often banal set of declarations which remained Libya's political Bible for nearly four decades. Quotes from the Green Book were plastered across bridges, walls, schools and post offices across Libya. All children were required to learn the Green Book. Children could recite passages by heart.

In theory, according to Gaddafi, Libyans controlled their country through consensus decisions made in public meetings held every few months, as though Libya could be managed much like a rural village. In reality, Gaddafi ensured political disarray and paralysis, in which only one person's opinion counted in all decisions: his. Any challenge invited harsh punishment. Thousands died in Gaddafi's jails, and hundreds of thousands of Libyans fled into exile for fear of being ensnared by his ever-watchful security forces.

Outside of Libya, Gaddafi will be remembered for his enmities. To Europeans and Americans in particular, Gaddafi's legacy will be indelibly marked by bloodshed and violence. The Libyan leader's foreign ambitions began in earnest after Libya became a major oil producer during the 1970s and 1980s, bringing billions of dollars of oil revenues into the country, and turning Gaddafi into a major financial benefactor in the region. He chose to spend some of his wealth on terrorist organizations, like the Palestinian Abu Nidal group, which, financed by Libya, carried out the 1986 bombing of the La Belle Discotheque in West Berlin, which killed two American servicemen. In retaliation, President Ronald Reagan sent planes to bomb installations in Benghazi, as well as Gaddafi's compound in Tripoli, where they obliterated a two-story residence and killed Gaddafi's adopted daughter. Gaddafi memorialized the attack as a sign of the West's enmity toward him. A master of image-making, Gaddafi left the Reagan-era wreckage intact for a quarter-century, with a gold-painted statue in front of the smashed house, showing a raised fist around a crumpled F-16 bomber on which was painted "USA." The statue was just a short but provocative walk away from where Gaddafi hosted Western leaders in his tent over several years.

In December 1988, two years after the U.S. bombing, Libya struck back with its most devastating attack. A Pan Am passenger jet exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing 270 people. In 1992, the United Nations imposed economic sanctions against Libya, forcing out U.S. oil companies, which ran much of the country's huge energy operations. Gaddafi was not deterred, however. With European oil companies still operating, and his oil wealth continuing to grow, he financed other terror groups. Having been rebuffed by many of his Arab neighbors as an eccentric menace, Gaddafi cast himself instead as an African leader, backing regimes that conducted savage campaigns of violence in West Africa. But one global event in which Gaddafi had no role ? the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the U.S.--drastically changed the Libyan leader's policies. Fearing that he might be the next target of attack, after the West's invasion of Afghanistan and then Iraq, Gaddafi abandoned his pursuit of nuclear weapons in 2003. In painstaking deals cut behind closed doors, Libyan and CIA officials began sharing intelligence about al-Qaeda, which Gaddafi had long loathed. Indeed, Gaddafi was the first head of state, in 1998, to ever request an Interpol arrest warrant against Osama Bin Laden.

When the U.S. lifted sanctions in 2005, American oil companies rushed back to Tripoli. So too did other Western companies, scrambling to reenter one of Africa's biggest oil producers. Within a few years, sprawling InterContinental and Marriott Hotels had opened along Tripoli's Mediterranean sea front, and tall office towers sprung up to house the onrush of new business.

Gaddafi's willingness to change was extremely limited, both in terms of style and political substance ? even as his eccentricities became self-parody. To the end, during Gaddafi's meetings with Western leaders, when they sat on a traditional divan in his Bedouin tent, he hectored them about historical wrongs against Libya. He insisted on traveling with his tent, too, including to Paris during a frigid winter, and he attempted and failed to set a tent up in the New York area, when he went to address the United Nations in 2009. On that occasion, he harangued the West for more than 90 minutes, attacking its moral bankruptcy in an often nonsensical rant.

It can be argued Gaddafi has done some good. At least in some small measure due to his efforts, the country now has modern highways, several cities, high literacy and relative prosperity for many Libyans. Yet despite the veneer of success, for most Libyans the Gaddafi years have an acrid taste. Their memories will likely be of a cloistered regime whose privilege and wealth were increasingly reserved for a small circle of Gaddafi loyalists and relatives. They will also remember the ghastly brutality.

When activists staged a limited rebellion in Benghazi in 1996, security forces retaliated by killing about 1,200 inmates ? many of them from Benghazi ? in the notorious Abu Salim prison. It was that attack which finally sowed the seeds for Gaddafi's demise. The relatives of those killed in 1996 formed a protest group, one part of which rejected Gaddafi's offers of compensation. It was the core group of those relatives who initially staged the fateful demonstration outside Benghazi's courthouse on Feb. 15, 2011, that sparked the revolt, and ultimately brought down Gaddafi after nearly 42 years in power.

In the end, no one could save Gaddafi ? not the mercenaries he had hired from Chad and Mali; not the Western politicians nor the Western oil companies; and not Gaddafi's seven sons whose bitter rivalries he had helped to feed over the years as they maneuvered for the dynastic succession. After the uprising began last February, and long before the NATO bombing began last March, Gaddafi climbed atop the stone wall of the fortress in Green Square. There, he told a few hundred supporters that he would "die here on the dear soil of Libya." Not for him an ignominious exile, or surrender to a war-crimes trial in The Hague. Instead, he vowed to die like a soldier, as a martyr in battle. He is now, it appears, dead. But he will not be remembered as a martyr. That honor is reserved for the countless lives he took and the many who died fighting to bring him down.

See TIME's special report "The Middle East in Revolt."

See the world's most influential people in the 2011 TIME 100.

View this article on Time.com

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Heart failure hospital stays fall, saving billions (AP)

CHICAGO ? Hospital stays for heart failure fell a remarkable 30 percent in Medicare patients over a decade, the first such decline in the United States and forceful evidence that the nation is making headway in reducing the billion-dollar burden of a common condition.

But the study of 55 million patients, the largest ever on heart failure trends, found only a slight decline in deaths within a year of leaving the hospital, and progress lagged for black men.

"While heart failure hospitalizations have decreased nationally overall, certain populations haven't seen the full benefit of that decrease," said lead author Dr. Jersey Chen of Yale University School of Medicine.

Possible explanations for the decline in hospital stays abound, including healthier hearts, better control of risk factors like high blood pressure, and more patients treated in emergency rooms and clinics without being admitted to hospitals, said Dr. Mariell Jessup, medical director of the Penn Heart and Vascular Center in Philadelphia.

"I think it's extraordinary news," said Jessup, who wasn't involved in the new research. "Many efforts at changing the natural history of this disease seem to be having an effect, especially with the hospitalization rate. But it's still a very problematic disease."

More than 5 million Americans and 22 million people globally have heart failure. Their hearts strain to pump blood because of damage, often from a heart attack or from high blood pressure. Fluid backing up into the lungs can leave people struggling to breathe.

Heart disease contributes to heart failure. Last week, federal health officials reported that the prevalence of self-reported heart disease in the U.S. decreased from nearly 7 percent to 6 percent from 2006 to 2010.

Fewer hospital stays saves Medicare a lot of money because heart failure is the most common cause of hospitalization in older patients.

From 1998 to 2008, the rate fell from 2,845 hospitalizations per 100,000 Medicare beneficiaries to 2,007 per 100,000, according to research appearing in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

If the rate had remained the same, there would have been 229,000 more heart failure hospital stays in 2008 at an additional cost to Medicare of $4.1 billion, Chen said.

Other reasons for declining hospital stays may include specialized pacemakers and better use of medications such as ACE inhibitors that relax blood vessels, diuretics that prevent fluid buildup, digoxin that boosts heartbeat strength and beta blockers that ease strain on the heart.

Shortness of breath sent heart failure patient Maria Marure to several Chicago hospitals this year. In August, the 56-year-old spent a week at Our Lady of the Resurrection Medical Center, where leaders are focused on keeping heart failure patients healthy once they're home and avoiding readmissions. Next year, the nation's new health law begins punishing hospitals with high readmission rates for heart failure by shrinking Medicare payments.

The Chicago hospital made sure Marure had a medical interpreter to translate a nurse's instructions into Spanish and convey her questions. Marure said it was the first time she understood her heart failure and why it was important for her to watch her weight ? which can signal excess fluid. The hospital sent her home with a scale, made sure she had home care and a nurse called her periodically.

Even with all that, in less than three weeks, Marure was struggling to breathe again. A doctor sent her to a different hospital, where she was admitted for four days.

That patient's experience illustrates why heart failure is still a challenge, despite the new findings ? as does the one-year death rate found in the study. The proportion of patients who died within a year after being discharged fell, but only slightly, from about 32 percent to about 30 percent during the decade.

"The death rate is still unacceptably high," said Dr. Mihai Gheorghiade of Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. Hospitals need to aggressively treat heart failure patients' other ailments and immediately schedule follow-up care after discharge, said Gheorghiade, who wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal.

"It is a sign of hope. However, we are far from achieving our goals," he said.

___

Online:

JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org

___

AP Medical Writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/seniors/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111018/ap_on_he_me/us_med_heart_headway

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Thursday 20 October 2011

Michelle Obama to Announce 25,000 Jobs for Veterans, Spouses (ABC News)

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House panel sets hearing on China trade concerns (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? A senior Republican lawmaker on Tuesday announced a congressional hearing next week on Chinese trade practices he said were hurting American businesses and workers, but stopped short of promising action on Senate currency legislation to deal with the concerns.

"China's distorting trade policies are deeply troubling and cannot be allowed to stand," House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp said in a statement announcing the October 25 hearing.

Camp put forth a list of concerns he said were "costing U.S. jobs," but did not include currency among them even though many lawmakers say China undervalues its currency by as much as 15 percent to 40 percent to give its exporters an unfair trade advantage.

The senior Democrat on Camp's committee, Sander Levin, criticized Republicans on that panel for waiting 10 months to hold its first hearing on China and for neglecting currency.

"Republican leadership continues to criticize the possibility of taking action to confront China's currency manipulation even as it pursues inaction on every other trade-distorting practice by the Chinese," he said.

"We should be taking action on all possible fronts. Hundreds of thousands of American jobs are at stake," Levin added.

Last week, the Senate approved a bill to pressure China to raise the value of its yuan against the dollar by allowing U.S. companies on a case-by-case basis to seek countervailing duties on goods from countries with an undervalued currency.

House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, has called the legislation "dangerous" because of its potential to start a trade war.

But a majority of House members, including 61 of Boehner's fellow Republicans, support a similar bill and Democrats are pushing for a vote.

Camp's statement referred to both the positive and negative aspects of U.S.-China trade.

"The Chinese market presents enormous potential for growing U.S. exports, which support American jobs. But China purposefully makes it harder to sell our goods and services, unfairly subsidizes its own companies, and blatantly steals the intellectual property of American businesses," Camp said.

He also suggested the onus was on the White House, rather than Congress, to devise a response to the problem.

"The President and his Administration should continue to press China to open its markets through every available avenue. And when China has violated its international obligations, the United States must aggressively enforce its rights," Camp said.

"I look forward to hearing the Administration's plan for addressing China's persistent barriers to U.S. exports and investment and exploring what should be done to ensure American employers and workers are treated fairly."

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/pl_nm/us_usa_china_trade

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